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Broithe

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Well maybe not in case of Rita or rather Meta Davies the maid who issued a ticket to Paul McCartney.

Privatisation adds another layer of strangeness to all of this. I would have thought that that would result in a more rigorous approach to revenue generating enforcement. That is certainly the case with car clamping in Dublin.

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6 minutes ago, Ironroad said:

....Privatisation adds another layer of strangeness to all of this. I would have thought that that would result in a more rigorous approach to revenue generating enforcement. ...

Meanwhile, over at Post Office Ltd.....

23 hours ago, Broithe said:

..... However, driving on the footpath is an offence -....

Meanwhile, over at Dublin Bus....

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Posted (edited)

Private clamping on the Big Island became largely illegal a decade ago. You do see the odd clamp by a state agency, but not many.

It is all about who's done what and to whom. 

With the Post Office as an example, there appears to have been a clear and widespread conspiracy to pervert the course of justice on a large scale over many years, but, somehow, the cops seem able to ignore that.

They'll drag anti-oil protestors off the road and fling them into the back of a van, but won't say 'boo' to a farmer blocking the same road in a separate dispute.

Etc.

It can be hard to know which laws you're allowed to break and which you aren't. I wouldn't venture into Birmingham much, but I had to go once and, approaching a set of traffic lights as they changed to red, I could have stopped, but I got the idea that the bloke behind me wasn't going to be interested in stopping, so I went through. When I glanced in the mirror, I saw that another six cars behind him had also followed us through.

There's also the madness that you don't have to put signs up for a 30mph limit, although there will usually be a set - but, the mere presence of lampposts less than 200m apart is enough to specify the speed limit - as if you're supposed to get out and measure the gaps. There are a few sections of roads with no signs and a run of street lights that 'generate quite a bit of cash' via their speed cameras. The opposite is also true - there are sections of the A55 with streetlighting but no repeater signs showing the 70mph limit that the cops actually assume is there. It's all a gamble, at times.

I always used to assume that the speed limits were in nautical miles per hour, rather than mph, but even that is dodgy now. The enforced limits are generally slower in 'quiet' areas, like Wales and the more rural parts of England, than they would be in the busy parts.

And three lane roads still exist in a few places, where you can drive in the centre lane in either direction and it's up to you and the bloke who'll run into you to play chicken competently...

Edited by Broithe
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5 hours ago, Broithe said:

... three lane roads still exist in a few places, where you can drive in the centre lane in either direction and it's up to you and the bloke who'll run into you to play chicken competently...

....and to add some extra elements to that frisson of uncertainty, the oncoming driver may well be under the influence of his cannabis habit, may have no insurance, and the car he's driving may be on cloned registration plates since it doesn't have any valid MoT or Vehicle Excise Duty. And he may not even have a valid licence....

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16 hours ago, Broithe said:

And three lane roads still exist in a few places, where you can drive in the centre lane in either direction and it's up to you and the bloke who'll run into you to play chicken competently...

Living in the UK 30-40 years ago I used to enjoy driving on the three lane sections of the A5 north of Milton Keynes, you had to go to Ireland to see really crazy driving behaviour.

Took a  autumn weekend trip home to Ireland via  P&O Cairnryan-Larne ferry about 30 years, leisurely trip southwards to Dublin checked out Whitehead and some gricing on the GNR line at Dunleer and Drogheda.

Trip  back to Scotland was a bit of a rush leaving late afternoon to catch the overnight boat to Scotland.

The N1 road North from Drogheda to wards Monaster Boyce was basically a two lane Highway with hard shoulder in either direction. As I overtook an Expressway Bus a "madman" decided to simultaneously overtake me using the southbound Hard Shoulder just as a southbound car appeared in the distance like something from a 'Mad-Max' movie. Our 'madman was unrelenting and just about avoided the southbound car and a nasty smash.

Edited by Mayner
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  • 4 weeks later...

Well it must have been a heck of a party 'cos we watched the display till after midnight over here in Lincolnshire. Amazing! never seen the Northern Lights before and I did'nt need to book a cruise!!  :tumbsup:

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Looking at that last night from Co. Laois, seemed to be a spoked formation with shafts of light spreading out. The centre of it was well defined, we were joking that the TARDIS was about to come out of it….

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5 minutes ago, LNERW1 said:

Looking at that last night from Co. Laois, seemed to be a spoked formation with shafts of light spreading out. The centre of it was well defined, we were joking that the TARDIS was about to come out of it….

The TARDIS materialised on the main runaway Wellington Airport on 1st May https://www.wellingtonairport.co.nz/news/airport-updates/tardis-lands-on-wellington-runway/ and the Southern Aurora is currently (10:20pm) visible in parts of the South Island https://www.1news.co.nz/2024/05/11/awe-inspiring-aurorae-amaze-over-south-island-more-expected/  Penguins  and some crazy scientists only land based life in the Antarctic.

Interesting seeing similar effects at both poles something to do with a Solar Storm apparently.

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  • 4 weeks later...
3 hours ago, spudfan said:

Came across this and it must have been taken during a hot summer when water was being rationed.clipboard_image_d10377d4327d5566.thumb.jpg.b512b913426f5c2b3bbefdca578e3f4c.jpg

Not the typical DRS clean loco image.

Possibly the Rail Head Treatment Train (RHTT) used in UK leaf fall season uses high pressure spray to clean railhead covers locos and stock with muck?

Railhead Treatment Train

 

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17 hours ago, spudfan said:

Came across this and it must have been taken during a hot summer when water was being rationed.clipboard_image_d10377d4327d5566.thumb.jpg.b512b913426f5c2b3bbefdca578e3f4c.jpg

I saw one in that state at Holyhead. It looked like it had had a coat of Halford primer and just the wiper arc masks peeled off at the front.

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We talked elsewhere recently about landslides causing a temporary dams and the consequences of the dam then collapsing.

This happened in Canada a few days ago and a very large 'reservoir' has built up already.

First Nation chief says it's not the first time a slide has blocked  Chilcotin River | Canada's National Observer: Climate News

The dam will fail at some point in the near future and a large-scale evacuation has been necessary.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/chilcotin-river-landslide-aug-1-1.7282210

It is all a matter of the rate that the dam opens up at, which is a difficult thing to predict accurately.

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  • 2 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

Reconnoitring a route for our next near-death experience, I noticed this relic, north of Lismore. Definitely past its best days.

https://www.google.com/maps/place/Old+CIE+Boxcar/@52.2141443,-7.9788022,175m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m6!3m5!1s0x484347588ca437d5:0x3ad3cf52347377bb!8m2!3d52.214156!4d-7.978891!16s%2Fg%2F11sjkq7z_m?entry=ttu.

 

Edited by Broithe
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19 hours ago, Broithe said:

Reconnoitring a route for our next near-death experience, I noticed this relic, north of Lismore. Definitely past its best days.

https://www.google.com/maps/place/Old+CIE+Boxcar/@52.2141443,-7.9788022,175m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m6!3m5!1s0x484347588ca437d5:0x3ad3cf52347377bb!8m2!3d52.214156!4d-7.978891!16s%2Fg%2F11sjkq7z_m?entry=ttu.

 

Is that your T700? I've a real gra on me for one of them!

Currently have a BMW 1150GS & Honda Rally 250, so I would need to move the Beemer on before thinking of the T700!

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49 minutes ago, skinner75 said:

Is that your T700? I've a real gra on me for one of them!

Currently have a BMW 1150GS & Honda Rally 250, so I would need to move the Beemer on before thinking of the T700!

No, not mine. I just noticed the marker for the van when looking to preview some possible* routes and saw his pictures as a result.

I still have four bikes, but all tarmac jobs, and I haven't been on one for years now...
 

* I use the word 'possible' in a very tight literal sense. Google Maps is very handy, but the fine detail can be important and hard to be confident of - a route we may do may have us needing to traverse a ford on foot, which will be a variable obstacle that could cause issues.

We went for a 'short one' in the Slieve Blooms a couple of weeks ago and a 'short cut' turned out to be an hour and a half to go 800 metres, whilst trying not to end up on the news...

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2 hours ago, Broithe said:

We went for a 'short one' in the Slieve Blooms a couple of weeks ago and a 'short cut' turned out to be an hour and a half to go 800 metres, whilst trying not to end up on the news...

I've been to the Slieve Bloom mountainbike trails - on the Offaly side mainly - starting off from Kinnity Castle carpark. 

Speaking of Kinnity, and Google Maps, if you are around them parts again, one thing you could check out is Irelands only pyramid:
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Kinnitty+Pyramid/@53.0961733,-7.7204277,193m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m6!3m5!1s0x485cffb2d679e46b:0x298d9c1759b54c2!8m2!3d53.0961676!4d-7.7199457!16s%2Fg%2F11c534f03x?entry=ttu

Built as a family tomb, by the then owner of Kinnity Castle.

There are walking trails as well as the mtb ones starting from Kinnity Castle

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20 minutes ago, skinner75 said:

I've been to the Slieve Bloom mountainbike trails - on the Offaly side mainly - starting off from Kinnity Castle carpark. 

Speaking of Kinnity, and Google Maps, if you are around them parts again, one thing you could check out is Irelands only pyramid:
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Kinnitty+Pyramid/@53.0961733,-7.7204277,193m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m6!3m5!1s0x485cffb2d679e46b:0x298d9c1759b54c2!8m2!3d53.0961676!4d-7.7199457!16s%2Fg%2F11c534f03x?entry=ttu

Built as a family tomb, by the then owner of Kinnity Castle.

There are walking trails as well as the mtb ones starting from Kinnity Castle

I was aware of the pyramid.

I did get around to calling in there recently.

DSC_0637.thumb.JPG.8c83118776b665ba593d80783844cc29.JPG

 

There's also a more pointy pyramid at Kilcooley Abbey, off to the south, in Tipp.

DSC_0024.thumb.JPG.e4e3407de8ae220b9f0f95552d1dbc96.JPG

 

Our expeditions are recorded here - red is done, green are targets.

https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1T818xPremNk151Ady98HI6vgLiiTTb_1&usp=sharing

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